A beautiful design, made identical to the original

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The ProductThe Specs

Designed in 1977

Winner of the 1979 international design award Compasso d’Oro

Sleek gold adds retro glam

About the VICO MAGISTRETTI ATOLLO TABLE LAMP

This sleek all gold version of the award winning Vico Magistretti Atollo Table Lamp, brings retro glam to the forefront with its cylindrical base and mushroom top. Like a piece of art sculpted from steel and glass, this lamp oozes power and style, whilst still being functional as an effective lamp. Instantly upgrade rooms in your home by placing this luxurious lamp on a side table in your living room, or in your bedroom. If you’re looking for something a little more subtle, the Atollo Table Lamp also comes available in white and black.

THE STORY BEHIND THE VICO MAGISTRETTI ATOLLO TABLE LAMP

Designed in 1977 at the peak of Italian modern design, Vico Magistretti's Atollo lamp was an instant success. Two years after debuting it won the Compasso d'Oro and has been featured in design museums and art galleries around the world ever since. The key to its success is perhaps due to its striking balance of strength and fragility. It is as hard-wearing as Magistretti and his contemporaries would always demand, but also maintains a delicate, lightweight quality that is simply unlike any other design of the period, or arguably since.

Width: 25 cm

Height: 35 cm

Depth: 25 cm

Packaging: 37cm x 37cm x 36cm

Packaging weight: 7 kg

Boxes: 1

About The Designer:

Vico Magistretti

By the time Vico Magistretti was 30 he had won the Milanese Triennale, contributed to QT8 (the late-1940s experiment in social organization and urban planning) and worked as a highly respected architect in his father’s practice. Born in Milan in 1920, Magistretti’s history is permanently tied to the city of his birth and its post-war reconstruction. His willingness to blend styles and approaches, without losing a unique vision makes him one of the most distinctive figures of Italian modern design. He remains one of Italy’s most unusual designers, something particularly apparent in his industrial designs; intensely practical and always addressing the social issues he observed in Milan. Magistretti continued to research, teach, travel and design until his death in 2006.

"“There is no excuse for designing ugly things. In that sense work is always conditioned, but it is born to be conditioned, a hypothetical work seems to me to be something absolutely stupid."